The Key's Top 15 Albums of 2017

WXPN Radio

Published: December 01, 2017 12:00 Source

1.
Album • Apr 14 / 2017
West Coast Hip Hop Conscious Hip Hop
Popular Highly Rated

In the two years since *To Pimp a Butterfly*, we’ve hung on Kendrick Lamar\'s every word—whether he’s destroying rivals on a cameo, performing the #blacklivesmatter anthem *on top of a police car* at the BET Awards, or hanging out with Obama. So when *DAMN.* opens with a seemingly innocuous line—\"So I was taking a walk the other day…”—we\'re all ears. The gunshot that abruptly ends the track is a signal: *DAMN.* is a grab-you-by-the-throat declaration that’s as blunt, complex, and unflinching as the name suggests. If *Butterfly* was jazz-inflected, soul-funk vibrance, *DAMN.* is visceral, spare, and straight to the point, whether he’s boasting about \"royalty inside my DNA” on the trunk-rattling \"DNA.\" or lamenting an anonymous, violent death on the soul-infused “FEAR.” No topic is too big to tackle, and the songs are as bold as their all-caps names: “PRIDE.” “LOYALTY.” “LOVE.” \"LUST.” “GOD.” When he repeats the opening line to close the album, that simple walk has become a profound journey—further proof that no one commands the conversation like Kendrick Lamar.

2.
by 
Album • Jun 09 / 2017
Indie Rock Indie Folk
Popular Highly Rated

In the wake of their arresting debut album, Big Thief find further beauty in ever harsher realities on *Capacity*. It\'s bound together by singer/songwriter Adrianne Lenker, who’s achingly fragile and coldly confident within the same song, as she shares vivid, intimate details of kisses, crashes, and a long-lost brother. Stark acoustic numbers like \"Pretty Things\" and \"Coma\" glow with a warm, vintage sheen, making them timeless, while expansive heartland rocker \"Shark Smile\" gives Lenker\'s wraith-like presence room to truly soar.

3.
Album • Aug 25 / 2017
Heartland Rock Indie Rock
Popular Highly Rated

After his breakthrough *Lost in The Dream*, Adam Granduciel takes things a step further. Marrying the weathered hope of Dylan, Springsteen, and Petty with a studio rat’s sense of detail, *A Deeper Understanding* feels like an album designed to get lost in, where lush textures meet plainspoken questions about life, loss, and hope, and where songs stretch out as though they\'re chasing answers. For as much as Granduciel says in words, it’s his music that speaks loudest, from the synth-strobing heartland rock of “Holding On” and “Nothing to Find” to ballads like “Clean Living” and “Knocked Down,” whose spaces are as expansive as any sound.

4.
by 
Album • Feb 03 / 2017
Alternative R&B
Popular Highly Rated

The album that finally reveals a superstar. Sampha Sisay spent his nascent career becoming music’s collaborator à la mode—his CV includes impeccable work with the likes of Solange, Drake, and Jessie Ware—and *Process* fully justifies his considered approach to unveiling a debut full-length. It’s a stunning album that sees the Londoner inject raw, gorgeous emotion into each of his mini-epics. His electronic R&B sounds dialed in from another dimension on transformative opener “Plastic 100°C,” and “Incomplete Kisses” is an anthem for the broken-hearted that retains a smoothness almost exclusive to this very special talent. “(No One Knows Me) Like the Piano,” meanwhile, makes a solid case for being 2017’s most beautiful song.

5.
Album • Aug 11 / 2017
Indie Rock
Noteable

The questioning of everything is a big reason Popular Manipulations sticks its existential landing. The music is elegant, weaving multiple melodious identities together song after song, pushing parts to their limit in terms of sounding busy. “Salt” is a standout track with exactly this, the drums incorporating their own heart throbbing cadence, placing a foundation for the guitars and bass to extend their utility. The vocals offered on the track finds multiple ways to attack, all accessible and dynamic to the vivid four minute cut. There’s the low and distraught line, “I could keep you company while it heals, but would you try to break my heart?” or the dazzling repeated line, “until we burn out” which throws the song into a pounding tantrum. “Airplane” plays like a dissonant ballad, warped to a shoegaze style trance, with drums that crash like thunder and walls of distortion keeping the song’s trudging pace going. Again, the vocals have to cut through the thick atmosphere, and they do with a sense of desperation, tearing away at the fear of nothing. “Fat Kiddo” is one track that sticks out against its brethren, utilizing an acoustic guitar line to produce the somber mood, letting most of the ear rattling distortion take a back seat. It’s a touching track that showcases The Districts ability to bounce between a plethora of styles, able to process different dynamic ideas and keep arrangement interesting without losing a song’s charm. The song also sends the album into the more straight forward back half of the record, less electronic and suffocating and more gracious and tap dance flavored. It’s a story that outlines the whole of Popular Manipulations, starting at a horrible thought but coming to the realization that we are capable of love, even when completely alone, even through the use of human interaction. - New Noise 4/5

6.
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Album • Jun 16 / 2017
Synthpop Alt-Pop
Popular Highly Rated

Four years after Lorde illuminated suburban teendom with *Pure Heroine*, she captures the dizzying agony of adolescence on *Melodrama*. “Everyone has that first proper year of adulthood,” she told Beats 1. “I think I had that year.” She chronicles her experiences in these insightful odes to self-discovery that find her battling loneliness (“Sober”), conquering heartbreak (“Writer in the Dark”), embracing complexity (“Hard Feelings/Loveless”), and letting herself lose control. “Every night I live and die,” she sings on “Perfect Places,” an emotionally charged song about escaping reality. “I’m 19 and I\'m on fire.\"

7.
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Album • May 19 / 2017
Indie Folk Singer-Songwriter
Popular Highly Rated

Rocket is Philadelphia-based artist Alex G’s eighth full-length release—an assured statement that follows a slate of humble masterpieces, many of them self-recorded and self-released, stretching from 2010’s RACE to his 2015 Domino debut, Beach Music. Amid the Rocket recording process, Alex made headlines for catching the attention of Frank Ocean, who asked him to play guitar on his two 2016 albums, Endless and Blonde. More than any stylistic cues, what Alex took from the experience was a newfound confidence in collaboration. Rocket wears this collaborative spirit proudly, and in its numerous contributors presents a restless sense of musical experimentation - effortlessly jumping from distorted sound collage to dreamy folk music to bouncing Americana. Rocket illustrates a cohesive vision of contemporary American experience; the cast of characters that Alex G inhabits have fun, fall in love, develop obsessions, get in trouble, and—much like rockets themselves—ultimately they burn out. Alex, though, in a collection of songs that’s both his tightest and most adventurous, is poised only for the ascent.

8.
by 
Album • Jul 07 / 2017
East Coast Hip Hop
Popular Highly Rated
9.
Album • Mar 10 / 2017
Folk Rock Singer-Songwriter Americana
Popular Highly Rated
10.
by 
Album • Mar 17 / 2017
Indie Rock
Popular Highly Rated

You can purchase this album on vinyl or CD at store.spoontheband.com.

11.
Album • Jul 14 / 2017
Indie Rock Pop Punk
12.
Album • Jul 14 / 2017
Indie Rock Singer-Songwriter
Popular Highly Rated
13.
by 
Album • Oct 06 / 2017
Alternative R&B UK Bass
Popular Highly Rated

R&B singer Kelela’s deeply personal debut LP does just what it says on the label. Over beats from Jam City, Bok Bok, Kingdom, and Arca—which swerve from warped and aqueous to warm and lush to icy and danceable—Kelela turns her emotions inside out with a sultriness and self-assuredness that few underground artists can muster. She’s tough and forthright, tender and subdued on songs about breakups (“Frontline”), makeups (“Waitin”), and pickups (“LMK”)—and the way she spins from one mode to the next is dizzying in the best way possible.

14.
Album • May 05 / 2017
Indie Rock Emo
15.
by 
Album • May 05 / 2017
Indie Rock Bedroom Pop
Noteable